Crafoord Prize

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The Crafoord Prize
Awarded for in astronomy and mathematics, biosciences, geosciences or polyarthritis research, awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Country Sweden
Presented by Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
First awarded 1982 (1982)
Official website www.crafoordprize.se

The Crafoord Prize is an annual science prize established in 1980 by Holger Crafoord, a Swedish industrialist, and his wife Anna-Greta Crafoord. Administered by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the prize is awarded in four categories: astronomy and mathematics; geosciences; biosciences, with particular emphasis on ecology; and polyarthritis, the disease from which Holger severely suffered in his last years. According to the Academy, "these disciplines are chosen so as to complement those for which the Nobel Prizes are awarded".[1] Only one award is given each year, according to a rotating scheme – astronomy and mathematics; then geosciences; then biosciences.[1] A Crafoord Prize is only awarded when a special committee decides that substantial progress in the field has been made.[1] The recipient of the Crafoord Prize is announced each year in mid-January; on Crafoord Day in April, the prize is presented by the King of Sweden, who also presents the Nobel Prizes at the ceremony in December.[1][2] The prize money, which as of 2016 is 6,000,000 kr (or US$700,000), is intended to fund further research by the winner.

The inaugural winners, Vladimir Arnold and Louis Nirenberg, were cited by the Academy for their work in the field of non-linear differential equations. The first woman to be awarded the prize was astronomer Andrea Ghez in 2012.

Winners

Year Category Image Laureate Nationality Work Ref.
1982 Mathematics Vladimir Arnold-1.jpg Vladimir Arnold Russian Theory of non-linear differential equations [3][4]
 Louis Nirenberg Louis Nirenberg Canadian American[A] [3][5]
1983 Geosciences Edward Norton Lorenz American Geophysical hydrodynamics [3][6]
 Henry Stommel Henry Stommel American [3][6]
1984 Biosciences  Daniel Janzen Daniel H. Janzen American Co-evolution [3][7]
1985 Astronomy  Lyman Spitzer Lyman Spitzer American Studies of the interstellar medium [3][8]
1986 Geosciences  Claude Allègre Claude Allègre French Isotope geochemical relations [3][9]
Gerald J. Wasserburg American [3][9]
1987 Biosciences Eugene Odum American Ecosystem ecology [3][10]
Odum, Howard T.jpg Howard T. Odum American [3][10]
1988 Mathematics  Pierre Deligne, seated, facing left and away from the camera Pierre Deligne Belgian Algebraic geometry [3][11]
Alexander Grothendieck.jpg Alexander Grothendieck None[B] [3][12]
1989 Geosciences  James Van Allen James Van Allen American Exploration of space, the discovery the Van Allen belts [3][9]
1990 Biosciences  Paul R. Ehrlich Paul R. Ehrlich American Dynamics and genetics of fragmented populations [3][13]
 Edward Osborne Wilson E. O. Wilson American Theory of island biogeography [3][14]
1991 Astronomy Allan Sandage American Study of galaxies [3][15]
1992 Geosciences Adolf Seilacher German Research into evolution of life [3][9]
1993 Biosciences W. D. Hamilton British Theories of kin selection and genetic relationship [3][16]
 Seymour Benzer in his office at Caltech in 1974 with a big model of Drosophila Seymour Benzer American Genetical and neurophysiological studies of fruit flies [3][17]
1994 Mathematics  Simon Donaldson Simon Donaldson British Four-dimensional geometry [3][18]
 Shing-Tung Yau Shing-Tung Yau American[C] Non-linear techniques in differential geometry [3][19]
1995 Geosciences Willi Dansgaard Danish Development of isotope geological analysis methods [3][9]
 Nicholas Shackleton Nicholas Shackleton British [3][9]
1996 Biosciences  Robert May Robert May Australian Ecological research [3][20]
1997 Astronomy Fred Hoyle British Study of nuclear processes in stars, stellar evolution [3][21]
Edwin Ernest Salpeter American [3][22]
1998 Geosciences  Don L. Anderson Don L. Anderson American Study of the structures and processes in the interior of the Earth [3][17]
Adam M. Dziewonski American[D] [3][23]
1999 Biosciences  Ernst Mayr in 1994, after receiving an honorary degree at the University of Konstanz Ernst Mayr American Developing the concept of evolutionary biology [3][24]
John Maynard Smith.jpg John Maynard Smith British [3][24]
George C. Williams American [3][24]
2000 Polyarthritis Marc Feldmann British Definition of TNF-alpha [3][2]
 Ravinder N. Maini Ravinder N. Maini British [3][2]
2001 Mathematics  Alain Connes Alain Connes French Theory of operator algebras, founder of the non-commutative geometry [3][25]
2002 Geosciences Dan McKenzie British Dynamics of the lithosphere [3][26]
2003 Biosciences  Carl Woese Carl Woese American Third domain of life [3][27]
2004 Polyarthritis Eugene C. Butcher American Study of molecular mechanisms concerning white blood cells [3][28]
Timothy A. Springer American [3][28]
2005 Astronomy  James E. Gunn James E. Gunn American Understanding the large-scale structure of the Universe [3][17]
 James Peebles James Peebles American [3][29]
 Martin Rees delivering a lecture at Jodrell Bank Martin Rees British [3][29]
2006 Geosciences  Wallace Smith Broecker Wallace Smith Broecker American Research into the global carbon cycle [3][30]
2007 Biosciences Robert Trivers American Analysis of social evolution [3][31]
2008 Astronomy Rashid Sunyaev Rashid Alievich Sunyaev Russian Contributions to high-energy astrophysics and cosmology [3][32]
Mathematics  Maxim Kontsevich Maxim Kontsevich Russian[E] Contributions to mathematics from modern theoretical physics [3][33]
 Edward Witten writing on a blackboard Edward Witten American [3][33]
2009 Polyarthritis  Charles Dinarello Charles Dinarello American Isolation of interleukins, understanding their role in the onset of inflammatory diseases [3][34]
 Tadamitsu Kishimoto Tadamitsu Kishimoto Japanese [3][34]
 Toshio Hirano Toshio Hirano Japanese [3][34]
2010 Geosciences  Walter Munk Walter Munk American "for his pioneering and fundamental contributions to our understanding of ocean circulation, tides and waves, and their role in the Earth's dynamics". [3][17]
2011 Biosciences 50px Ilkka Hanski Finnish "for his pioneering studies on how spatial variation affects the dynamics of animal and plant populations". [3][35]
2012 Astronomy  Reinhard Genzel Reinhard Genzel German "for their observations of the stars orbiting the galactic centre, indicating the presence of a supermassive black hole". [3][36]
50px Andrea M. Ghez American [3][17]
Mathematics  Jean Bourgain Jean Bourgain Belgian "for their brilliant and groundbreaking work in harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, ergodic theory, number theory, combinatorics, functional analysis and theoretical computer science". [3][37]
Terence Tao Terence Tao Australian [3][37]
2013 Polyarthritis  Peter K. Gregersen Peter K. Gregersen American "for their discoveries concerning the role of different genetic factors and their interactions with environmental factors in the pathogenesis, diagnosis and clinical management of rheumatoid arthritis". [3][38]
 Lars Klareskog Lars Klareskog Swedish [3][38]
 Robert J. Winchester Robert J. Winchester American [3][38]
2014 Geosciences Peter Molnar American "for his ground-breaking contribution to the understanding of global tectonics, in particular the deformation of continents and the structure and evolution of mountain ranges, as well as the impact of tectonic processes on ocean-atmosphere circulation and climate". [3][39]
2015 Biosciences Richard Lewontin American "for their pioneering analyses and fundamental contributions to the understanding of genetic polymorphism". [3][40]
Tomoko Ohta Japanese [3][40]
2016 Astronomy Roy Kerr New Zealand “for fundamental work concerning rotating black holes and their astrophysical consequences”. [41]
Roger Blandford American
Mathematics Yakov Eliashberg American “for the development of contact and symplectic topology and groundbreaking discoveries of rigidity and flexibility phenomena”

Notes

a Nirenberg was born in Canada.[5]

b Grothendieck was born in Germany, but spent most of his life in France and was legally stateless. He declined his prize.[12]

c Shing-Tung Yau was born in China.[42]

d Dziewonski was born in Poland.[23]

e Kontsevich was born in Russia.[33]

See also

References

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  41. Crafoord Prize 2016
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External links